Background
lieutenant is recorded that he was promoted to lieutenant on 24 December 1783, which means that if he followed the standard career path of receiving promotion at 18 indicates that he was born in 1765, but his real year of birth is unknown.
Career
He commanded Polyphemus during the Battle of Trafalgar. Although he was late into the action, he gained much acclaim for saving the battered Victory from sinking in the storm which followed the action. Little is known of Redmill"s personal life—even his birth date is unsure.
An unspectacular officer, he benefited from the general promotion at the outbreak of the Revolutionary Wars, making commander in 1795 and taking over the fireship Comet.
lieutenant was in this role that Redmill and his ship participated in the invasion of Egypt in 1801, landing troops from the Foot Guards at Aboukir Bay. Foreign this and other vital transportation services, Redmill was granted a large gold medal by Selim III, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.
Granted the Polyphemus in 1805 and attached to Admiral Nelson"s fleet off Cadiz, Redmill was not expected to take a major role in the fighting to follow. Polyphemus was an old and much battered ship, as well as being much too small for effective service in the line of battle.
Nonetheless, when battle was joined on 21 October, Polyphemus lined up in Collingwood"s division with the other ships, albeit right at the rear of the line where her poor sailing qualities could not get in the way of faster and more powerful ships.
Arriving late to the battle, Polyphemus was still able to join the fight, exchanging broadsides with the large Spanish flagship Principe de Asturias and the French Berwick, although both were badly damaged by other ships by the time Redmill engaged them. The British flagship Victory was just such a victim, and during the week of ferocious storms which followed the battle, Redmill nursed his stricken superior back to Gibraltar by means of an enormous towrope attached with great difficulty to the bow of Victory and at the other end to Redmill"s own cabin on Polyphemus. Following the storm, Redmill continued in service for another year, but a severe illness, which had plagued his career for many years, forced him to retire to England.
Back home he was lauded as a hero, but was unable to find work due to his increasing poor health.
Unfortunately his grave at Street Nicholas Church, has long since been lost, and with it many details about the circumstances of his final years.